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36 F.

3d 1089

NOTICE: First Circuit Local Rule 36.2(b)6 states unpublished


opinions may be cited only in related cases.
Leanders H. SMITH, Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
WGBH-TV, Defendant, Appellee.
No. 94-1341

United States Court of Appeals,


First Circuit.
September 27, 1994

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
Massachusetts [Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge ]
Leanders H. Smith on brief pro se.
Alan D. Rose, Paul G. Lannon and Nutter, McClennen & Fish on
Memorandum In Support Of Motion for Summary Disposition for
appellee.
D.Mass.
AFFIRMED.
Before Selya, Cyr and Boudin, Circuit Judges.
Per Curiam.

Leanders H. Smith appeals the district court's order denying his motion under
Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) to reopen Smith's previously dismissed case against
appellee WGBH Educational Foundation, Inc. We affirm.1

Smith's motion alleged that Smith had new evidence that the court's dismissal
of his Title VII action against WGBH had been based on WGBH's "fraud,
misrepresentation, ... or other misconduct." According to Smith's affidavit,
which was attached to the motion, the tape given by WGBH to the district court

in 1989 recorded a 1981 telephone conversation with his supervisor at WGBH,


John Plausse, and not a face-to-face conversation with Plausse in 1984-85, as
WGBH had apparently represented. Smith also submitted a notation made by a
union attorney, Eugene Salisbury, in connection with a 1982 labor grievance
settlement. In relevant part, the notation stated simply "tapes," but Salisbury's
December 1993 letter to Smith explained that "[t]he notation with respect to
tapes has to do with your destroying certain tapes which you alleged contained
John Plausse's voice in some threatening episodes and to furnish a copy to the
company."
3

Smith's motion clearly had no merit. As Smith himself acknowledges in his


brief, he had already presented the same argument about WGBH's alleged
misrepresentation to the district court in his Motion for Relief From All
Pending Orders of the Court and for the Court to Enter Default Judgment
Against WGBH, dated February 27, 1990. That motion also indicated that
Smith had actually submitted a copy of the 1981 tape to the court. In hearings
before the court, Smith had also testified that the tape given the court by
WGBH dated from before 1982. The court's order dismissing the case
explicitly rejected that testimony, concluding that at least portions of the tape
had dated from the relevant time period (March 15, 1982-June 4, 1986).

Nor does Salisbury's notation or letter constitute evidence of misrepresentation


by WGBH. Neither one states that the tape WGBH gave the district court was
one of the tapes involved in the 1982 grievance settlement, or a tape that did not
date from 1984-85, as WGBH had apparently asserted. It is Smith's affidavit
that does so. But that affidavit was based on knowledge Smith obviously
possessed in 1990, when he submitted his Motion for Relief to the court, and so
was not newly discovered evidence. Therefore, the court did not abuse its
discretion in denying Smith's motion to reopen his case on the ground that
Smith had newly discovered evidence about WGBH's alleged
misrepresentation.

Smith also argues that Salisbury's notation and letter show that the tape
presented to the court was subject to the 1982 labor grievance settlement, in
which WGBH had waived its right to litigate any claims arising out of the
grievance. For that reason, argues Smith, the district court had no jurisdiction to
base its dismissal of his Title VII action against WGBH on that tape.

Smith's argument in this respect fails for a variety of reasons. First, no one
questioned that the court had jurisdiction over Smith's Title VII action. WGBH
had not given the court the tape in an attempt to relitigate substantive issues
resolved in the 1982 grievance settlement, but to show the court that Smith had

tapes he had denied possessing, a relevant question in the Title VII case.
Second, Smith's argument assumes that the tape given to the court was a tape
dating from 1981, but the court had found that at least portions of the tape dated
from the relevant portion of the 1982-86 discovery period. Third, Salisbury's
notation and letter do not say, let alone show, that the tapes discussed in
connection with the 1982 grievance settlement included the one actually given
to the district court in 1989 by WGBH. Finally, Smith failed to explain to the
district court when he had first discovered Salisbury's notation, or why he could
not have discovered the notation at some earlier time. (On appeal to this court,
he says that the notation was sent to him anonymously in December 1993.)
Thus, the district court had no reason to believe that Smith's motion met the
requirements for Rule 60(b) relief. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(2) (permitting
relief from a final judgment on the ground of newly discovered evidence
"which by due diligence could not have been discovered in time to move for a
new trial under Rule 59(b)"); Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(b) (permitting a motion for a
new trial to be brought within 10 days of entry of final judgment).
7

As the above discussion shows, Smith's motion lacked any merit, and Smith
had no legitimate basis for believing that the court would reopen his case
against WGBH. This is especially so, since the allegedly new evidence did not
show that WGBH had intentionally engaged in any misrepresentation as
alleged, nor did it relieve Smith of culpability for the other instances of
misconduct which had motivated the court to dismiss his action in the first
place. Accordingly, we think that this appeal was frivolous within the meaning
of Fed. R. App. P. 38, and we award double costs to WGBH.

Affirmed. Double costs awarded to appellee WGBH.

Since the facts and legal arguments are adequately presented in the briefs and
record and our decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral
argument, we hereby deny Smith's motion for oral argument. See Fed. R. App.
P. 34(a)

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